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Search Results for: United Airlines / 1800-299-7264 Reservations deals in April 2021 Deals and Offers

The Labyrinth of Solitude and Other Writings

by Octavio Paz

“The Labyrinth of Solitude is essential to an understanding of [Mexico] and, by extension, Latin America and the third world.” –The Village Voice…

The Six Wives of Henry VIII

by Alison Weir

“Impeccable research . . . Entertaining . . . The story of England’s second Tudor monarch and his rather sordid marital life has been told often. But never has it…

Red Star Over China

by Edgar Snow

A reissue of Edgar Snow’s classic account as the first Westerner to meet Mao and the Chinese Communist leaders in 1936….

The Raymond Chandler Papers

by Tom Hiney

“Chandler, the premiere practictioner of the American hard-boiled detective novel, elevated the wisecrack into a rhetorical figure somewhere between sarcasm and simile. For the Chandler fan, The Raymond Chandler Papers…

A Joyful Noise

by Deborah Weisgall

“Weisgall’s lucid prose, her eye for detail, her ability to evoke characters and tell a story keep one turning pages.” –Los Angeles Times…

First Love and Other Shorts

by Samuel Beckett

“The cracked and crackling narrator of First Love who tells of how he met a woman on a bench, went back to live with her, and left her as she…

The Bureau and the Mole

by David Vise

“A first-rate spy story.” –Entertainment Weekly…

A Certain Curve of Horn

by John Frederick Walker

“Walker writes with insight and compassion. . . . A Certain Curve of Horn deserves to be ranked with Peter Mathiessen’s classic, The Snow Leopard. It underscores the sanctity of…

Mint Condition

by Dave Jamieson

“An excellent and rigorous history of baseball cards . . . Dave Jamieson’s Mint Condition is a comprehensive romp through a quirky subject’s history.” —Marc Tracy, The New York Times…

Harlem

by Jonathan Gill

“[A] panoramic history . . . Gill blends high-density research, political and cultural sophistication, and narrative drive to produce an epic worthy of its fabled subject.” —Edward Kosner, The Wall…